My experience as an early career engineer at Boeing
Around last year I saw someone post their experience. Figured I’d give my thoughts as someone who worked at Boeing and has since moved on. I've also learned so much from this community during my time at Boeing and want to give back. TLDR at the bottom
General Info:
Worked 2 years at Boeing in STL, MO as an Electrical Design & Analysis engineer. Boeing was my first engineering job out of college. Computer Engineer undergrad.
Salary:
L1, 0 YoE: 1.1 comp ratio -> L1, 1 YoE: 1.1 comp ratio -> L1, 2 YoE: .98 comp ratio
I was initially offered a 1.0 comp ratio but after some negotiation and research on my end, I was able to start at a 1.1 comp ratio. That might’ve been the primary reason I didn’t get a raise after my 1^(st) year. For year 2, I left for a new opportunity before ACR came around so Idk what my new salary would’ve been and if I’d even be promoted. The change in comp ratio correspond to the updated salary changes to the SJCs.
Promotion / Levels:
From my own personal experience, I was getting the general vibe that a promotion from L1->L2 was a fixed two year timeline. However, I’ve also known others who started around the same time as me who got promoted in a 1 year timeline. If I wanted to speedrun promotion, I would schedule 1:1 meetings with my manager to discuss growth opportunities and what I could do right now to get me to the next levels. This would give me opportunities to take on workload above my paygrade, so that my manager can have something to show for why I deserve to get promoted around ACR timelines.
Management:
I had a very positive experience with management. I had great support during discussion about my career interests and needs working for my team.
The People:
From my experience I’ve worked with a mixed of people who were at different stages of their career. I haven’t had a bad experience working with others and everyone was collaborative. I’ve noticed that many of the mid to late career engineers I’ve interacted with have been with the company for 10+ years. I’ve also encountered many early career engineer folks who I felt were better off working at a more faster-pace company.
From an office culture perspective, I did feel like an outlier mainly because the topic of buying a house or doing house related maintenance dominated watercooler talk. I don’t own a house and also had no interest in settling down in the area so I never related to the talks. My floor had a culture of bringing donuts whenever a significant accomplishment happened during our life as a way to celebrate with the team.
Aside from that, I did feel that there are opportunities within the company to find what you’re looking for if you make effort in reaching out to others. From my personal experience, I’ve contacted people who were apart of the ECFP program when I was trying to learn more about it, a tech fellow mentor who gave my advice on how to move forward towards my career goals, a Boeing Resource Group(BRG) where I met other people who were also new hires, managers that manages engineers for the roles I wanted to pivot towards, managers from different Boeing sites that I had genuine interest in moving to, managers for remote teams that hired for my skillsets and lastly, other Boeing employees who also wanted to leave and whom I could do mock interviews with. Heck, I met someone while I was at Boeing who now works at the same company as me. I also met someone at my orientation group who was in the same BRG as me that I had a hard crush on but never confessed because I put my career goals first over a potential relationship. On my last day of work which coincided with the BRG meeting, I went with the intention of asking her out(I got scared and now live forever with a what-if).
The Work:
In regards to my role I found the work I was doing technically underwhelming. This was also apparent when I was waiting around for my clearance to get through when my team literally didn’t give me any work for 11 months. It reached a point that I felt my team giving me work for the sake of giving me work which lead to me stretching out my assignments. After everything went through, I was hoping it’d be different but it was the same deal from what I experienced from before. When I asked about a timeline for completing my work, many of them had month long deadlines. I’d say the majority of my task was grunt work or long hanging fruits, which I guess is expected for entry-lvl employees.
Due to the factors above, I felt that it was very easy for me to become “invisible” at my job. But rather than coast I decided to put that effort into improving my interview skills for new opportunities.
In terms of WLB my team had great work flexibility. I only had to clock in 8 hours a day and could flex the time or WFH when necessary. I also had the opportunity to work OT.
Why I left:
After some networking and putting application out there, I was able to get an opportunity at Boeing STL to pivot towards my preferred career field(EE -> SWE) but it came with no pay bump and it used a programming language(Ada) I was worried would limit my future job opportunities.
I ended up leaving because I was able to get a C/C++ SWE role at a different competitor who offered me a 28% pay bump and better WLB(5 days in office at Boeing vs 4x10 hybrid at new company).
I really liked the opportunities available at the Boeing STL sites and despite not liking the STL area itself, I probably would’ve not have minded no pay bump if I got a C/C++ SWE role.
TLDR:
Overall Boeing was a great stepping stone for my career and I don’t regret my time spent working there. I genuinely felt that I had plentiful opportunities at the STL sites to progress further in both my career and personal interests. I actually did get an opportunity to pivot towards my preferred field at Boeing but I ultimately ended up leaving to a different company for a similar career pivot that offered me a pay bump and better WLB. I only see myself coming back to Boeing for a remote/hybrid role with a similar pay bump.